If you’re backpacking in New Zealand, you can expect to see some stunning sunsets and sunrises. Today’s Friday Travel Photo takes you to Coromandel on New Zealand’s North Island. This shot is looking west off of the peninsula towards Auckland (check out these Auckland budget travel tips).
If you’re planning a trip to Cormandel, check out these tips for your time in one of my favorite areas of New Zealand.
Do you have a photo you’d like featured on Backpackingmatt? Email the photo to matt [at] backpackingmatt [dot] com. I’ll gladly feature it with a link back to your blog.
New Zealand is a country of just about four million people with a whopping forty million sheep. There are sheep everywhere. And they’re delicious. Today’s Friday Travel Photo features one of these forty million sheep.
Her name was Gloria and she lived near one of the greatest hostels I’ve found in New Zealand. Perched at the top of a hill on the South Island’s Catlin Coast, the Catlins is an area of lush forests, rolling farmland, and rugged bays. The greens contrasted with the vivid blues of the sea will remind you what a stunning country New Zealand is.
We were quite shocked when we looked out the front door of the hostel to find this massive sheep looking right back at us. I would venture to guess that Gloria might be the friendliest sheep in New Zealand. If you’re backpacking through the Catlins, stay a night (or three or four) at the Hilltop Backpackers in small little Papatowai and chances are you’ll meet Gloria too.
Do you have a photo you’d like featured on Backpackingmatt? Email the photo to matt [at] backpackingmatt [dot] com.
Today’s Friday Travel Photo takes you to one of the most stunning cities in Europe: Edinburgh, Scotland.
A city filled with cozy pubs, great museums, an excellent nightlife scene, and some spectacular architecture. Edinburgh is a city you can visit for a week, and somehow find yourself there months later.
This photo was taken from the Edinburgh Castle. Wherever you are in Edinburgh, you stand a pretty good chance of catching a view of this imposing fortress perched on top of the volcanic Castle Rock. The castle in some form or another has dominated the Edinburgh skyline since the 12th century.
The Castle is arguably more impressive from the outside than from in. Consider saving yourself the £15 it costs to tour the castle, and instead simply take in the structure from spots around Edinburgh.
If you’re backpacking through Edinburgh on a budget, consider reading these posts as well:
Three Edinburgh Pubs You Can’t Miss – You can’t come to Edinburgh and not sample some of Scotland’s national drink. Check out these three pubs during your trip to Edinburgh.
Are you interested in having your photo featured here? Email the photo and details to matt [at] backpackingmatt [dot] com
The rocks of this area of Turkey have been whipped into shockingly smooth curves – this volcanic terrain, with rock formations known as ‘fairy chimneys’ has been shaped by Mother Nature over thousands of years. The landscape of Cappadocia today seems to belong nowhere else other than perhaps the moon.
Most shocking about Cappadocia perhaps isn’t the actual landscape, yet it’s the work of humans who have built homes into these rocky cones. A stroll around Cappadocia will result in you finding hidden caves, churches, chapels, and other treasures built into the stone. Today, you’ll even find luxury hotels and hostels.
Here are some travel tips for your trip to Cappadocia:
Stay in a hostel built into the rock formations. Where else in the world can you spend the night in a well furnished hostel built into a cave?
Take a hot air balloon tour. As Verity did, I recommend you take the time to take in the magical landscape of Cappadocia in a hot air balloon. There aren’t many places where you can experience a hot air balloon flight cheaper than Turkey, and a trip up shouldn’t cost you much over €150. As Verity said, “It was so beautiful, balloons rising in the crisp morning air over twisting valleys, patchwork farms and the eery shapes of fairy chimneys.”
Hike around the Ihlara Valley. This valley is a 16 kilometer long gorge cut deep into the volcanic landscape of southern Cappadocia. The Melendiz Stream flows through the gorge and the result is an oasis of green in the middle of the otherwise barren landscape. Like the rest of Cappadocia, you’ll find underground dwellings and beautiful churches.
If you’re considering a trip to Cappadocia, you’ll want to allow three or four days at the minimum to fully experience everything this area has to offer. Cappadocia is a 50 Lira (approximately $30) and 10 hour bus ride from Istanbul.
Do you have a photo you’d like featured on Backpackingmatt? Email the photo to matt [at] backpackingmatt [dot] com.
Below is Part Two in a series called, Reaching 25 Countries by the Age of 25: Experiences Along the Way.
20) Gawking at the larger-than-life snow sculptures in Harbin
“Isn’t it weird we’re a couple of Americans applying for a Chinese visa in Madrid?” said the man standing in line behind me at the Chinese consulate. I’d never thought of it, but my sister’s athletic ability got her an invitation to a figure skating competition and me a great excuse to discover Asia.
While seeing where my relative died during the Boxer Rebellion and zooming through the hutongs was delightfully strange, the memory most vivid in my mind was seeing the world-famous Ice Sculpture Exhibition in Harbin with my sister. Steparian wolves circled the grounds and vendors sold candied apples on a stick. Living away from my sister is hard, we transformed into kids building snowforts in our front yard and skipped hand-in-hand through the complex made of ice from the Songhua River. It almost made me like snow again.
19) Getting robbed while on a trip
Our Spring Break trip to Acapulco was supposed to be a last fling before graduating college. Instead, I tried out my Spanish skills on the men serving the drinks and quickly became the darling of the pool. More and more Mexicans began talking to me, and being in my element, I didn’t notice that someone had taken our keys right out of our bags. One digital camera, two dozen meal tickets and the small change we’d left to the maid were gone quicker than we could run up twenty flights of stairs.
Lesson learned – always be wary of who you’re traveling with, who is around you and where your belongings are.
18) Climbing Moorish ruins in Sintra
As an American, I seem to forget how old everything outside my country is. I got one of those feelings climbing Castelo dos Mouros in Sintra, Portugal with my grandmother, climbing higher above the town and more into the understanding of how the cosmos have worked over hundreds of millions of years.
The ninth century castle stills dominates the landscape of the lush, hilly town, standing testament to the longevity of people throughout history. In my home base of Sevilla, construction on the first subway is held up by the discovery of Roman ruins, obligated to be preserved under law. And to think that to us Americans, the Chicago Cubs’s last pennant seems like a millennia ago.
17) Living off of Guinness and curry chips for a weekend
Two of my dear college friends, (Backpacking) Matt and Brian, moved to Ireland fresh out of college and settled in Galway, working as chuggers and waiters. Since eating local food ranks high on my list of travel pleasures, I had my first Guinness upon arrival and shared curry chips with a fellow traveler shortly after. I was hooked, and consumed nothing but for the entire trip.
From Brussels to Granada to Prague, Europe has some of the world’s top cuisine and damn good street food. Eating is a simple indulgence known the world-over. No sense in getting a reservation at El Bulli a year in advance – stopping at a stand is double the delight at a fraction of the cost.
16) Skiing Zell-am-See
I snowboard and painfully left mine behind to move to a place where snow comes around every 60 years ago or so (this being one of them). Even Solynieve, Southern Spain’s only ski resort, is far, so I’ve been relinquished to taking up walking as a sport. When my boyfriend suggested we go to Austria after Christmas, I jumped at the chance to snowboard. Goggles, gloves and snowpants were bought on my dime, and I told him I would buy him lessons and a ski lift pass once in the Alps.
The Snow Express took us from Salzburg to Zell-am-See, a world-famous resort sitting above a placid lake. Boyfriend likes being good at everything he tries, so he immediately hated snowboarding and complained all the way down the hill. I chided him, but applauded him for trying something new for me. That’s the best part of travel – we suddenly feel empowered to step outside our zones and seek a new challenge.
Read about Cat’s travels and her life teaching English in Spain on her blog, Sunshine and Siestas. Check back next week for Part 3 in this series.
All photos not listed Creative Commons are credited to the author.
Kia Ora - I'm Matt. Adventurer, Instagrammer and New Zealand travel planning expert living in Queenstown, NZ. Founder of Planit NZ - New Zealand's largest travel planning & booking website.
Hello! I’m Matt. Thanks for checking out my blog. Be sure to follow me on Instagram for loads more New Zealand travel inspiration. Comment on one of my photos so I know you came from here!
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